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    Home»World Economy»Brazil Quietly Shifts Away From The Dollar To Gold
    World Economy

    Brazil Quietly Shifts Away From The Dollar To Gold

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteApril 17, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    The Banco Central do Brasil has raised gold’s share of reserves from 3.55% to 7.19% in just one year, effectively doubling its exposure and making gold the second-largest reserve asset after the US dollar, while total reserves stand at approximately $358.23 billion and the dollar’s share has declined to about 72%, marking a record low. This is not a marginal adjustment or routine diversification, it is a structural repositioning that reflects a growing unease with sovereign debt markets.

    When a central bank reduces dollar exposure while increasing gold holdings, it is not acting randomly but responding to a shift in confidence, and this aligns directly with the broader trend we are witnessing globally as central banks collectively purchased roughly 863 tonnes of gold in 2025 and are expected to remain strong buyers into 2026. The driving forces behind this are not inflation in the traditional sense, but geopolitical fragmentation, the weaponization of reserves, and the realization that sovereign debt levels are no longer sustainable without continued central bank intervention.

    Brazil’s move mirrors what we have been warning about for years, which is that capital flows, not trade balances, dictate the strength of currencies, and once confidence begins to erode in government debt, that capital begins to migrate into assets that are not someone else’s liability. Gold fulfills that role because it cannot be printed, defaulted on, or frozen by a foreign government, and this becomes critical in a world where sanctions and financial restrictions are increasingly used as political tools.

    The significance of Brazil’s decision is that it is not repatriating gold like France or Germany, but instead reallocating reserves in a way that quietly reduces dependence on the dollar without triggering market disruption. This is often how such transitions begin, as they unfold incrementally until they reach a tipping point. This is not about abandoning the dollar overnight, it is about gradually preparing for a world where confidence in sovereign debt is no longer taken for granted.



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